Nintendo reports quarterly profit but no word on new president after Iwata's death

By YURI KAGEYAMA AP Business WriterJuly 29, 2015 - 4:55 am EDT

TOKYO — Nintendo posted an 8.28 billion yen ($67 million) profit for the fiscal first quarter, helped by better sales and a cheap yen, but did not announce a new president to lead the company after the death this month of Satoru Iwata.

The future direction of the Kyoto-based company could change, depending on who succeeds Iwata. Earlier this year, Nintendo did an about-face and announced it would go into games for mobile devices, a move it had scoffed for years.

No successor for Iwata has been announced, and the company has said it will take its time.

Iwata, president from 2002, was a highly visible spokesman for Nintendo, and many in the game industry mourned the 55-year-old's death, which followed a long illness.

Nintendo has said star game designer Shigeru Miyamaoto will remain in the leadership team along with Genyo Takeda. It is unclear whether one of them would be the next president.

FILE - In this July 13, 2015 file photo, a shopper walks in front of Nintendo's Super Mario characters at an electronics store in Tokyo. Nintendo posted an 8.28 billion yen ($67 million) profit for the fiscal first quarter, helped by better sales and a cheap yen that boosts overseas earnings. Nintendo Co., the Japanese video-game maker of the Super Mario and Pokemon franchises, said Wednesday, July 29, April-June sales rose 20 percent to 90.2 billion yen ($729 million). (AP Photo/Koji Sasahara, File)

Nintendo had reported a 9.9 billion yen loss for the first quarter of the previous fiscal year.

The manufacturer of the Wii U home console left its annual profit forecast unchanged at 35 billion yen ($283 million).

Nintendo said sales were strong for the 3DS hand-held device, as well as for its amiibo figures.

Nintendo sold 470,000 Wii U machines for the April-June period this year, down from 510,000 the same quarter the previous year. It expects to sell 3.4 million for the year through March 2016.